While President Obama continues to tilt for windmills, rising oil and gas production has showered his administration with unexpected benefits. Those producers inadvertently include his arch enemies—the Koch Brothers. How deliciously ironic it is that the oil industry – consistently scorned by this president – has been one of the most potent economic drivers of this recovery, the biggest contributor to an improving balance of payments picture and has provided Obama significant leverage in digging out of his difficulties in the Middle East.

President Obama and fellow members of the flat earth society, who many years ago wrote off the future of conventional energy resources, must be stunned. The president has noted more than once that “we are running out of places to drill” and that “we have only 2 percent of the world’s oil reserves.” What a surprise, then, that the U.S. is on track to become the world’s largest oil and gas producer, likely overtaking Russia this year.

As noted recently in the Wall Street Journal, because advancements in horizontal drilling and fracking made huge new reserves economic, domestic production of natural gas last year was an all-time high--up 13 percent over the 2010 level, and 27 percent higher than output in 2002. In July, gas production was 56 percent higher than the recent monthly low recorded in September 2005. Similarly, oil output, which had declined steadily since 1970, turned up in 2010, and has increased 27 percent over the past five years, laying to rest the once-popular notion that we are running out of the stuff. That, my friends, is progress.

What does this unexpected windfall mean for the U.S.? First of all, it means jobs. From the beginning of 2007 through the end of 2012, the number of private sector jobs in the U.S. increased by about 1 percent. Over the same period, the number of people working in the oil and natural gas industry increased by 40 percent, accounting for more than 15 percent of the country’s overall gains.

A study by analytics and research firm IHS says unconventional oil and natural gas production and energy-related chemicals activity together supported more than 2.1 million jobs in 2012; the authors project the sectors will employ 3.9 million workers by 2025.

In addition, U.S. job growth will be spurred by the cost advantage U.S. firms have over competitors burdened by higher cost energy. Boston Consulting Group is projecting that by 2015, natural gas will be 60 to 70 percent cheaper, and electricity 40 to 70 percent less costly in the U.S. than in Europe and Japan.

Second, the shale revolution means lower imports. Our net imports of crude oil and refined products in 2005 totaled a record 12.5 million barrels per day; last year that had collapsed to 7.4 mb/d. The impact on our trade deficit has been profound. For example, the trade gap in December 2012 was the smallest in nearly three years, as exports of oil and other petroleum products rose to a record high and oil imports fell to 223 billion barrels, the lowest level since February 1997.

Third, it means a seismic shift in geopolitical alignments. Middle East oil and gas production going forward is not as consequential as in the past, and Russia’s power is diminished. Iran’s ability to threaten the world with production disruptions is reduced, which is one reason they are circling the negotiating table. Similarly, Russia’s clout and economy are threatened by the rising tide of U.S. production. Some seventy percent of Russia’s export revenue and 17 percent of GDP stems from oil.

To satisfy those who put him in office, Russian President Putin is spending heavily, running a budget deficit that will be closed only through higher oil prices – less likely due to our increasing output. Soon, as LNG exports gear up from the U.S. and elsewhere, Russia will no longer be able to punish Europe by withholding natural gas in exchange for political slights.

These are extraordinary changes – brought about by energy investment still opposed by the environmental fringe in the U.S. These people fear hydraulic fracking in spite of study upon study that shows the process to be safe and productive, and regardless of the long successful history of the approach. Happily, those with clearer vision are propelling our country forward; we all reap the benefits.

After more than two decades on Wall Street as a top-ranked research analyst, Liz Peek became a columnist and political analyst. Aside from The Fiscal Times, she writes for FoxNews.com, The New York Sun and Women on the Web.